Arab Times

Aquino vows to ‘neutralise’ kidnappers

Police check if headless body is that of Canadian

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MANILA, April 27, (Agencies): Philippine President Benigno Aquino vowed Wednesday to launch a military assault aimed at “neutralisi­ng” Islamic militants who beheaded a Canadian hostage and are holding more than 20 other foreigners.

“Casualties are to be expected. But what has to be of utmost importance is neutralisi­ng the criminal activities of the ASG,” Aquino said in a statement, referring to the Abu Sayyaf militant group by a commonly used acronym.

Aquino released the statement after the severed head of Canadian John Ridsdel, kidnapped seven months ago from aboard a yacht, was dumped Monday on a street on Jolo, a remote southern island that is one of the Abu Sayyaf’s main stronghold­s.

“This murder was meant to terrorise our whole population. The Abu Sayyaf thought they could instill fear in us. Instead, they have galvanised us even further to ensure justice is meted out,” Aquino said.

“We have always been open to talks with those who desire peace, but those who commit atrocities can expect the full might of the state.”

He did not give a timeframe for the assault.

The Abu Sayyaf militants, whose leaders have pledged allegiance to the Islamic State group, are holding more than 20 other foreigners captive.

These include another Canadian, a Norwegian man and a Filipina who were abducted at the same time as Ridsdel at a marina near Davao, the biggest city in the southern Philippine­s and about 600 kms (370 miles) from Jolo.

The Abu Sayyaf is also believed to be holding a Dutch birdwatche­r kidnapped from a southern Philippine island in 2012, as well as 18 Indonesian and Malaysian sailors abducted over the past month.

Aquino said the captives were under the control of Radullan Sahiron, one of the Abu Sayyaf’s founders who is some policies of incumbent President Benigno Aquino and former leader Gloria Macapagal Arroyo.

“I will not be ashamed to copy. Whatever works, let us continue,” he said.

He also talked about being sexually active at 71 and joked that among businessme­n, he should not be the only one accused of being a womaniser. The audience famous for losing one arm in battle against the military.

He said Sahiron had consolidat­ed his forces around himself and the captives in Sulu, a small Muslim-populated archipelag­o about 1,000 kms from Manila. Jolo is the biggest island in Sulu.

“This presents both a problem and an opportunit­y. It is a problem because of the sizeable force surroundin­g Sahiron and the captives, but it is also an opportunit­y because smashing these forces is within our grasp,” Aquino said.

The Abu Sayyaf is a radical offshoot of a Muslim separatist insurgency in the south of the mainly Catholic Philippine­s that has claimed more than 100,000 lives since the 1970s.

It is believed to have just a few hundred militants but has withstood repeated US-backed military offensives against it, surviving by using the mountainou­s, jungle terrain of the southern islands to its advantage.

Although the Abu Sayyaf’s leaders have pledged allegiance to IS, analysts say they are mainly focused on their lucrative kidnapping­s-for-ransom rather than setting up an Islamic caliphate.

Abu Sayyaf gangs have earned many millions of dollars from kidnapping foreigners and locals since the early 1990s.

Windfalls

One of the Abu Sayyaf’s biggest recent windfalls is believed to have come in 2014 when it claimed to have been paid more than $5 million for the release of a German couple abducted from aboard their yacht in the southwest Philippine­s.

Aquino also revealed a series of alleged Abu Sayyaf plots to kidnap Filipino boxing hero Manny Pacquiao and the president’s younger sister, Kris, a popular television personalit­y.

He said Isnilon Hapilon, who Islamic State has recognised as a local

laughed and applauded.

Duterte promised he would fight for the country to do what it wants in its exclusive economic zone in the South China Sea and took aim at Western powers for allowing Beijing to construct man-made islands in its waters. (RTRS) Filipino leader, was behind these plots.

He said Hapilon and other Abu Sayyaf leaders had wanted to conduct the kidnapping­s, conduct bombings in Manila and even assassinat­e himself so that IS would give them funds and resources.

He reassured the public that key leaders involved in these plots had been arrested and those threats had been put “to bed”.

However he also said Hapilon was on Basilan island, the other key Abu Sayyaf stronghold neighbouri­ng Jolo, and that military assaults against him were continuing.

On April 9, 18 Filipino soldiers were killed as they waged a day-long battle against Abu Sayyaf gunmen on Basilan.

Also Wednesday, the Philippine­s said it was considerin­g launching joint sea patrols with Malaysia and Indonesia in the waters where the recent kidnapping­s of the sailors occurred.

Meanwhile, Philippine police forensic experts were checking if a headless body of a Caucasian man found by villagers in a southern province is that of a Canadian hostage beheaded this week by Muslim extremists, officials said Wednesday.

The body was found beside a dry creek in a mountainou­s clearing near Talipao town in Sulu province, where Abu Sayyaf militants beheaded John Ridsdel after failing to get a huge ransom by a Monday deadline. Suspected militants later dumped Ridsdel’s head in Sulu’s Jolo town.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau condemned the brutal killing of Ridsdel, who was kidnapped with a fellow Canadian, a Norwegian and a Filipino woman from a southern marina on Samal island in September and taken by boat to Sulu.

In Canada, Trudeau said he spoke with Philippine President Benigno Aquino III about possible actions against the kidnappers.

“The discussion­s I had with President

N. Korea sets congress date:

North Korea on Wednesday formally set May 6 for the opening of a landmark ruling party congress -- the first in nearly four decades and an event many fear will be preceded by a fifth nuclear test.

Anticipati­on over the congress, last held in 1980, has been mounting since the North signalled its intention to hold the Aquino and are continuing to have with our allies in the Philippine­s is the need to bring these criminals to justice and to do whatever we can to express that we are very concerned about security of Canadians,” Trudeau said.

The Canadian leader stressed that “we will not pay a ransom”.

Under increased pressure, thousands of troops have been searching for the militants and their remaining 22 foreign captives, including those abducted with Ridsdel. They face a dilemma of how to wage an offensive against about 400 militants in Sulu’s vast jungle without endangerin­g the hostages.

Manhunt

About 2,000 military personnel, backed by UH-1 “Huey” and MG520 rocket-firing helicopter­s and artillery, are involved in the manhunt for the militants, who are believed to be massing in Sulu’s mountainou­s Patikul town, military officials said.

Amid the crisis, a top army official in Sulu, Brig Gen Alan Arrojado, resigned Tuesday from his brigade “due to conflict of approach in addressing the Abu Sayyaf threats” in the province. He did not elaborate.

The Abu Sayyaf began a series of large-scale abductions after it emerged in the early 1990s as an offshoot of a separatist rebellion by minority Muslims in the southern Philippine­s.

It has been weakened by more than a decade of government offensives, but has endured largely as a result of large ransom and extortion earnings. The United States and the Philippine­s have both listed the group as a terrorist organizati­on.

In related news, On Wednesday, army spokesman Major Filemon Tan said a headless body was found in a dried creek, near the jungles where Ridsdel was believed to have been beheaded by militants belonging to the Abu Sayyaf group. gathering way back in October.

Kim Jong-Un is expected to use the event to cement his position as supreme leader and take credit for pushing his country’s nuclear weapons programme to new heights.

No details have been provided of the agenda, but it will be scrutinise­d for any key policy changes or reshuffles among the elite.

The actual starting date had been a closely guarded secret before Wednesday’s announceme­nt by the politburo of the central committee of the ruling Workers’ Party of Korea.

In a statement carried by the North’s official KCNA news agency, the politburo said the congress -- only the seventh in the party’s history -- would open on May 6 but did not specify how long it would last.

The 1980 congress took four days, and South Korea’s Unificatio­n Ministry said it expected next week’s gathering to go on for “four or five days”.

There has been growing speculatio­n that North Korea may carry out a fresh nuclear test just ahead of the event as a display of national pride and strength.

On Tuesday South Korean President Park Geun-Hye said the North was understood to have “completed preparatio­ns” for a test, and could press the button at any time.

Such a move would constitute a dramatic act of defiance in the face of tough UN sanctions imposed on Pyongyang after its most recent nuclear test in January. (AFP)

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